China

Lingqu Canal

WHS Score 0.0 Votes 1
The Lingqu is an ancient canal that connects the Xiang River and Li River, joins the Yangtze River Basin and Pearl River Basin andl has been in service for over 2000 years as the major water transport route. The construction of the Lingqu was closely related to the military conquest of the Lingnan region by the Qin Empire.
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Full Name
Lingqu Canal (ID: 5814)
Country
China
Status
On tentative list 2008 Site history
History of Lingqu Canal
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UNESCO
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UNESCO.org

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First published: 28/10/20.

Zoë Sheng

Lingqu Canal

Lingqu Canal (On tentative list)

Lingqu Canal by Zoë Sheng

Come to Guilin and spend an extra day to visit Lingqu rather than enjoy the beautiful scenery to the south! (or, don't!) They say "The North has the Great Wall, the South has Lingqu". Comparing the two sites alone is a laughable. Basically Lingqu is special because it was used for military purposes in order to attack the Baiyue tribes in the south. Whatever the success rate it must have beaten moving the troops about on foot. I don't find it that special and the historical use may be correct but I find it very intangible. There are no remains of troop barracks or anything like that as far I see.

The other purpose of the canal was the obvious: connecting the mighty Xiang and Li rivers for water diversion and transportation (if you look at the map there is no water body that comes anywhere near so the canal makes total sense). Whereas those are great and they claim to be the first "first canal in the world to connect two river valleys", thus enabling boat transportation from Hong Kong all the way to Beijing, this may not be enough to deem it WHS. What you get to see now is a boring stretch of canal with mainly houses built around it. The traditional "washing clothes and vegetables" in the canal is also intangible and I find it rather disgusting.

There could be more than one place to visit but I found Xin'an to be ideal because …

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